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Higher education updates from the THE editorial team

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'Community of scholars' crumbling

The "community of scholars" in higher education is under threat because changes
imposed by policy-makers and university managers have left academics with an
identity crisis, researchers argued this week.

Rapid growth in student numbers, quality assurance requirements and government
pressure to widen participation and better prepare students for the workplace
have taken their toll on academics' sense of their role and being part of a
community.

Researchers who submitted papers to a Society for Research into Higher
Education conference at Lancaster University this week said that most academics
wanted a collegiate environment in which they had the opportunity for deep
reflection and to discuss and develop ideas with colleagues. But such
environments had become the preserve of small tight-knit disciplines and elite
institutions, they suggested.

According to William Fisher, assistant director of the Centre for Excellence in
Learning and Teaching at Hertfordshire University, performance measures have
masked the erosion of this ideal.

A paper Mr Fisher asks whether there is an identity crisis in higher education
and suggests that academics cling to an idealised view of what a university
should be in the face of productivity demands and an increasingly managerial
regime.

David Mills, a lecturer in educational studies at Oxford University, said he
thought that there were many examples of people "feeling lost" within
institutions that did not encourage research communities to develop.

He said: "If you are having to teach twice as many students, the opportunities
to sit down and talk have gone. It may be that this is not the deal you thought
you were getting into when you started your career as an academic."

Dr Mills said that lessons could be learnt from small disciplines such as
anthropology that had maintained a strong, close academic community, despite
changes in the sector.

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